Reproductive Injury Case Review

Request a reproductive injury case review.

If you or a family member has been diagnosed with uterine cancer, ovarian cancer, fertility complications, or another reproductive injury possibly tied to a specific product or exposure — long-term hair relaxer use, talcum powder use, prenatal medication exposure, or chemical workplace exposure — you may be eligible for a free, confidential case review.

Free initial review · No obligation · No attorney-client relationship is formed by submitting this form.

Who This Page May Help

Situations people often research.

Reproductive injury claims often involve a documented diagnosis paired with long-term use of a specific product or known chemical exposure. The strongest current claim patterns include uterine cancer following long-term hair relaxer use, ovarian cancer following long-term talcum powder use, and developmental conditions following prenatal exposure to certain medications. You don't need to know the legal terms — basic information about the diagnosis, the product or exposure, and approximate years of use is enough to start.

  • Uterine cancer following long-term chemical hair relaxer use
  • Ovarian cancer following long-term talcum powder use (perineal application)
  • Developmental conditions in children with prenatal medication exposure (acetaminophen and others)
  • Fertility complications or hormone-related diagnoses possibly tied to chemical or product exposure
  • Reproductive cancers following occupational chemical or industrial exposure
  • Other reproductive injuries where a specific product or exposure source can be identified
Submit Your Information

Reproductive injury case review form.

Start with the diagnosis or situation that best fits, then briefly describe the product or exposure involved. Contact information is requested so someone can follow up if your submission appears to match an available review path.

Approximate is fine. For developmental cases, the child's age at diagnosis is what matters.

Approximate is fine. Long-term use is often important for product-related reproductive cancer claims.

What's the diagnosis and when was it made? What product was used and how often? When did use begin and end? For prenatal exposure cases, when during pregnancy did exposure occur and what is the child's diagnosis?

Please do not include Social Security numbers, financial account numbers, full medical records, or highly sensitive personal information.

Your state helps identify whether location-specific deadlines, claim rules, or review options may apply.

For follow-up about your case review request.

Created by a California-licensed attorney. Your submission may be reviewed by participating legal professionals, legal advertisers, or intake partners where available. A submission does not guarantee eligibility, compensation, contact, or representation.

After Submission

What happens next.

Your information may be reviewed to understand whether it relates to a reproductive injury lawsuit category — hair relaxer uterine cancer, talcum powder ovarian cancer, prenatal medication, hormone-related, or other claim pattern — sponsored case-review path, or possible law firm follow-up.

If there appears to be a possible fit, a participating law firm, legal advertiser, intake provider, or other partner may contact you to ask for more information.

No attorney-client relationship is formed unless and until you sign an agreement directly with a law firm.

Important Disclosures

Read this before submitting.

Lawsuit Center is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Submitting information through this website does not create an attorney-client relationship and does not guarantee that you qualify for a claim, that compensation will be available, or that any attorney or law firm will offer representation.

Some pages may include attorney advertising, sponsored listings, paid law firm visibility, or referral-related opportunities. Sponsored visibility is advertising and should not be treated as a recommendation or endorsement of any attorney or law firm.

Reproductive injury claims are highly fact-specific. Diagnosis history, product use history, timing, and supporting medical records can significantly affect whether a claim is viable. Honest screening protects everyone's time.

Legal deadlines for product liability and personal injury claims can vary by state and can be short. If you believe you may have a claim, consider speaking with a licensed attorney as soon as possible.